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This great Nation & Its People War

Dale Dye: Why Marines Are Called “Devil Dogs” By Capt. Dale Dye, USMC (Ret.)

It’s one of the most memorable monikers for a fighting force around, and its legend stems from a brutal battle fought more than a century ago. The term was reportedly adapted from the German Teufel Hunden, and applied to American Marines following the Battle of Belleau Wood during World War I.

Charles H. Waterhouse painting illustrates the brutal efficiency of the U.S. Marines during the Battle of Belleau Wood
This Charles H. Waterhouse painting illustrates the brutal efficiency of the U.S. Marines during the Battle of Belleau Wood. Image: NARA

While various scholars have argued that point — and we’ll look into that shortly — an understanding of how such a familiar and persistent term came into American parlance requires some historical context.

A Coming Storm

In German General Erich Ludendorf’s grand scheme, any fighting done in or around Belleau Wood should have been a secondary concern. He had bigger and broader problems with the Aisne-Marne Offensive in the spring and summer of 1918. To deal with a deteriorating battlefield situation, Ludendorff launched Operation Blucher, involving more than half a million of his troops, across a broad front aimed directly at positions held by French, British and newly arrived American formations. Although no one in Berlin would admit to it, these offensives were in many ways acts of desperation.

Battle of Belleau Wood where U.S. Marines overcame stubborn and dug-in German defenders
The brutal and chaotic Battle of Belleau Wood where U.S. Marines overcame stubborn and dug-in German defenders. Image: U.S. Navy

It was becoming clear to the German high command by the middle of 1918 that they could not win a war of attrition now that the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) had arrived to reinforce the Allies. While the Germans had enjoyed some early successes in repeated drives across a broad front, they were faltering, often outrunning their supply lines.

By late May, this forced them to slow their advances and often engage in piecemeal battles rather than overpowering and blowing through Allied defenses as they had done earlier in the war. One of these fights morphed into the infamous Battle of Belleau Wood.

While that battle was not significant in the geography of fighting on the Western Front during World War I, it was pivotal for other reasons. It was the U.S. Military’s first major engagement in World War I and served to halt Germany’s last gasp move on Paris in the waning months of the war.

US Marines are shown here in early 1918 in Saint-Ouen-lès-Parey France
U.S. Marines are shown here in early 1918 in Saint-Ouen-lès-Parey, France, in preparation for heading toward the front lines. Image: NARA

Reports of the vicious — but victorious — fighting at Belleau Wood boosted Allied morale and solidly forged the reputation of the American Marines as a capable and reliable force in major land battles. It’s not an overreach to say that the Battle of Belleau Wood bought the U.S. Marine Corps a solid and long-lasting position in the U.S. military arsenal.

In early June 1918, Belleau Wood was simply a tangled, rocky patch of timber flanking the Paris-Metz road in northeastern France. The forest, dense with old oak, sycamore and hawthorn, covered just one square mile of a roughly 60-mile battle front running roughly parallel to the Marne River.

US soldiers with Chauchat machine guns
U.S. soldiers were often equipped with Chauchat machine guns that had been rechambered for the .30-06 cartridge. The .30-06 guns were considered even less reliable than the originals. Image: NARA

A German advance in the Aisne sector of France was progressing suitably if slowly until they hit a serious snag and an unexpected counterattack at a site marked on maps as Bois de Belleau. To backstop their play elsewhere on the line, the German command had emplaced a ground-holding, defense-oriented unit in and around the woods. It was up against this outfit that the American 4th Marine Brigade launched a legendary attack in June that became one of the most famous chapters in a storied history.

The Combatants

It helps to know a little about the players and their positions in the legend surrounding the Belleau Wood battle. The German outfit holding the area was a veteran trench division, organized, trained and equipped for defensive fighting. The 237th Infantry Division had about 10,000 troops on the roster, emplaced at various strategic points with the 197th Regiment at Mares Farm west of Belleau Wood and the 461st Regiment dug in throughout the forest proper.

Marines armed with M1903 Springfield rifles in Brouvannes France
U.S. Marines are shown here armed with their M1903 Springfield rifles in Brouvannes, France in 1918. Image: NARA

Allied forces involved in counterattacking included the 4th Marine Brigade, composed of the 5th and 6th Marine Regiments and the 6th Machine Gun Battalion, totaling short of 10,000 troops. These were deployed as part of the U.S. Army’s 2nd Infantry Division.

The American Marines were fairly new to the fighting, with limited combat experience in March of that year near Verdun. They were notably short on direct support artillery and had to rely mostly on French or British batteries for what little indirect fire support they could expect.

Individual Marines went into the fight primarily carrying M1903 .30-06 bolt-action rifles backed by M1911 semi-auto pistols or M1917 revolvers chambered for .45 ACP rounds. For squad-level fire support, the Marines had been issued the French Chauchat M1915 automatic rifles re-chambered to fire .30-06 ammo. The guns were notoriously unreliable but employed handily in the fighting at Belleau Wood. Most would rather have had the American Browning Automatic Rifles just coming into standard issue, but there were not enough to go around in the AEF, and as usual, the Marines were on the short end of the supply pipeline.

wartime poster showing American troops in action during World War I
Wartime poster showing American troops in action during World War I. Image: Library of Congress

For maneuver support and fire suppression, Marines of the 4th Brigade could call on the Hotchkiss M1914 heavy machinegun or a few British Lewis guns firing .303 rounds that had not been confiscated for use as aircraft armament. The guns were on call for support from the Marine Brigade’s 6th Machine Gun Battalion. When close-quarter push came to bloody shove in Belleau forest, it was grenades, bayonets, clubs and bare knuckles that carried the fight.

In general, common opinion among Allied and enemy commanders was dubious concerning the relatively unbloodied Americans. The Marines in particular were thought to be too underpowered due to their basic organization. The two regiments of the brigade (5th and 6th Marines) had three battalions composed of four rifle companies, each with around 250 Marines, plus the 6th Machine Gun Battalion. The full Brigade strength was just short of 8,500 officers and enlisted men at Belleau Wood. Given the high attrition rate on the Western Front due to deprivation and disease on top of combat losses, those numbers were considered much less than optimal.

One thing the Marine Brigade did not lack was effective leaders. Several Marine Corps luminaries were involved in the Belleau Wood fighting. There was, of course, Gunnery Sergeant Dan Daly who allegedly prodded his men through a wide open and fire-swept wheat field by shouting “C’mon, you sons of bitches, do you want to live forever?” That’s a matter of continuing scholarly dispute … except among Marines.

wartime recruiting poster promoted the Devil Dog Teuful Hunden story from the battle of Belleau Wood
This wartime recruiting poster promoted the “Devil Dog/Teuful Hunden” story from the battle of Belleau Wood. Image: Library of Congress

Familiar Marine leaders emerged from the fight to lead the post-war Corps, including future commandants such as John LejeuneClifton CatesLemuel Shepherd Jr.Wendell Neville and Thomas Holcomb. Other famous Marine leaders who fought at Belleau Wood included Roy Geiger, Holland M. Smith and Keller Rockey, all of whom went on to lead large units in the Pacific during World War II.

The Battle Begins

Disregarding the accepted wisdom that an attacking force needed a three to one advantage in manpower to best a defender, the Marines forged ahead on the offensive. On 4 June 1918, the 5th Marines pushed German defenders out of Mares Farm, holding there for the 6th Marines and machine guns to join for the assault on Belleau Wood. That monumental attack rolled in immediately after troops were in place facing the woods and its tenacious German defenders. It immediately turned into a close-quarters bloodbath.

Marine sentry in the foggy haze created by a mustard gas attack by the Germans
This photo shows a U.S. Marine sentry in the foggy haze created by a mustard gas attack by the Germans. Image: NARA

The German outfit holding Belleau Wood was full of veteran soldiers. As mentioned, they were a trench division organized and equipped for defense. They were supported by heavy mortars capable of firing both high explosive (HE) and chemical rounds. The dense woods at Belleau provided plenty of material for building bunkers, machine gun positions and various hardpoints. Attached pioneer units helped dig deep trenches and string complex barbed wire tangles throughout the area. Regular reconnaissance efforts gave the Marines some idea of what they were facing. There would be no problems with finding the enemy. Defenders were literally everywhere inside the one square mile of Belleau Wood. Everyone went into the fight knowing the enemy was dug in deep and determined to hold.

When the assault began on 6 June, Marines immediately suffered horrendous losses as they maneuvered to cross the wide open wheatfields flanking Belleau Wood. They were savaged by concentrated German small arms, machine gun and artillery fire, but continued advancing through the waist-high wheat heading directly for the edge of the forest. When senior Marine leaders fell under fire, junior men jumped up to take their places. Leaping over fallen men, the Marines pressed into the forest where encounters were often at point-blank range.

Exploding shells from enemy and Allied guns splintered the trees, showering the ground with wood splinters along with other deadly shrapnel. Still, the Marines continued the attack, driving deeper into the woods. It appeared nothing could slow their momentum for very long.

Even a last-ditch German effort using mustard gas that swirled like ground fog among the shattered trees and shrubbery of Belleau Wood failed. Donning gas masks, the Marines — wielding knives, rifle butts and clubs — continued to close with and kill the German defenders.

It was a brutal slugfest that quickly became a matter of small unit melees and inch-by-inch advances through defending crossfires. A series of bloody small unit attacks and counterattacks went on for two weeks as Army units were moved into positions on the flanks of the woods, allowing the Marines to regroup and reinforce.

Marines with German prisoners in the aftermath of the Battle of Belleau Wood
Shown here are U.S. Marines with prisoners in the aftermath of the Battle of Belleau Wood. Image: NARA

Belleau Wood was attacked at least six times until Marine grit and tenacity finally paid full dividends. The final reckoning showed the Marines had defeated elements of five German divisions in desperate fighting in and around Belleau Wood.

At last, on 26 June, Major Maurice Shearer, commanding the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines and attachments, led an attack that cleared the final German defenders from Belleau Woods. His after-action report was quickly picked up and trumpeted by the press. “Woods now U.S. Marine Corps entirely.” And that ended one of the most ferocious battles American forces would face throughout the entire war.

The Staggering Cost

At Belleau Wood and surrounding fights, the Marines lost some 4,000 casualties, including more than 1,000 killed in action. By every popular estimate of the time, the Marines should have been soundly defeated. But they were not.

Modern estimates indicate the Germans lost around 9,500 wounded, killed or captured, so the butcher’s bill for Belleau Wood clearly ran in American favor. Perhaps more importantly in the overview, the Marines had proven their combat prowess to both Allied and German commanders.

aggressiveness of US Marines in Battle of Belleau Wood in World War I
Reports called out the tenacity and remarkable aggressiveness of the Marines in the battle, leading to the “Devil Dogs” moniker they still have today. Image: NARA

The value of the Marines to the AEF ratcheted up significantly along with their reputation as fearless fighting men. The French were so impressed that they officially changed the name of the battle site. Belleau Wood became Bois de la Brigade Marine.

To this day, Marines serving with the 5th or 6th Marines wear a distinguishing red and green fourragere on their dress uniforms representing the Croix de Guerre, a recognition from the French government of their prowess and performance at the Battle of Belleau Wood.

Veteran German defenders were so awed by the violence and tenacity of the American assault and individual aggressiveness in combat that they were left grasping for ways to describe the Marines. There were early reports in German newspapers that the Marines in combat were like Teufel Hunden, or “Devil Dogs.”

The American press and the U.S. Marine Corps were all over that as both headline material and a cocky epithet for use in recruiting literature, along with a pugnacious bulldog mascot that was promptly adopted as a Marine Corps symbol in perpetuity.

But post-war scholars started sniping as official histories were being written. Some questioned the attribution to the German defenders at Belleau Wood. While the term certainly reflected the Marines’ aggressive, relentless fighting prowess and was of powerful value in recruiting and press coverage, some doubted its origin. Red flags began to appear among students of the war on both sides of the Atlantic.

German scholars argued that Teufel Hunden in two words as it appeared in English language press reports and recruiting posters of the period was inaccurate. Proper German grammatical use called for Teufelshunde — one word, including an “s”, which seemed to indicate someone on the Allied slide was indulging in creative license.

Birth of a Legend

Does it matter? Like other tales that compose the rich tapestry of American military history, what really matters is the result. And “Devil Dogs” resulted in a touchstone for modern Marines to recall a distinguished legacy of selfless service to Corps and country.

Battle sites such as Belleau Wood are uttered and revered throughout Marine Corps history along with places like Fallujah, Hue City, Khe Sanh, Chosin Reservoir and Iwo Jima. Those events are ingrained in the Marine Corps collective memory from the first day of boot camp.

Who actually coined the term “Devil Dogs”? Was it shocked and defeated German soldiers at Belleau Wood? Was it a civilian wordsmith looking for a catchy headline? Was it a savvy PR officer looking for a new recruiting hook? If you ask me, it doesn’t really matter. I think the Marines have earned it.

PS You might not wish to say anything about this fight when Folks from the 23rd Infantry Regiment are around. As they get a bit peeved about how they got left out from the story. Grumpy

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Bridget’s Stalker Meets Her SAINT By Bridget Fabel

Since 2016, I have spent my summers in a small 1971 camper trailer that I remodeled. This camper trailer is my way of staying on public land while supporting myself as a fly-fishing guide far from home. It also gives me a safe and secure place to lay my head and lock my door.

Bridget spends her summers alone in the remote wilderness in her small camper trailer.
Bridget spends her summers alone in the remote wilderness in her small camper trailer.

This warm and cozy shelter provides me the opportunity to move around the mountain and hunt and fish as much as possible. I follow the local forest service and BLM laws and move from campsite to campsite each summer. This trailer has been my summer home for four years now and I love the simple life that it allows me to live!

Her trailer gives Bridget the flexibility to move from campsite to campsite easily.
Her trailer gives Bridget the flexibility to move from campsite to campsite easily.

Am I Alone?

One of the most asked questions I receive is about if and how I feel safe being a young, small woman alone on the mountain in a trailer. In my mind, being a woman doesn’t make me more vulnerable. I am constantly armed and trained and not afraid to use my home-defense-weapon, or in my case trailer-defense weapon, at any time. And my self-defense firearm of choice is my Springfield SAINT Edge 5.56mm (you can see more about my rifle and how I have equipped it here).

Bridget’s “trailer-defense” firearm is a Springfield Armory SAINT Edge 5.56mm tricked out with a Vortex Crossfire optic, Viridian X5L-RS light/laser and Magpul AFG foregrip.
Bridget’s “trailer-defense” firearm is a Springfield Armory SAINT Edge 5.56mm tricked out with a Vortex Crossfire optic, Viridian X5L-RS light/laser and Magpul AFG foregrip.

Even with a rifle, being a woman alone on the mountain sounds dangerous to many people. My whole life I’ve participated in and excelled at male-dominated activities such as hunting, fishing and shooting. However, I would have never expected that I would have to load and shoulder my SAINT in defense of myself while living in my trailer. To my surprise, that day came on a crisp summer night.

Bridget appreciates the compact size of the SAINT Edge and its impressive 5.56mm power.
Bridget appreciates the compact size of the SAINT Edge and its impressive 5.56mm power.

Facing the Threat

On this particular night, I was packing up some outdoor items so that I could move my trailer to a new camping spot in the morning. In certain parts of the West, like where I park my trailer, you do not have to camp in designated camp spots. This means no campground hosts or fees, no other people and some very desolate areas. I like having the wilderness to myself and enjoying the peace, quiet and stars each night. After it got dark that night around 9:30 pm, I settled into my trailer for the night and went to bed.

Bridget’s cat, Brookie, alerted her to a car approaching her trailer late one night.
Bridget’s cat, Brookie, alerted her to a car approaching her trailer late one night.

I grabbed my rifle and shouldered it with the barrel facing down toward the floor. I chambered a round and kept the safety on. An old red truck with a serious muffler problem approached my trailer and parked right outside. This truck was about five feet from my door. My trailer door was deadbolted from the inside. I peeked out the window to see a middle-aged man exit the truck and approach my door. I knew that there was absolutely nothing good that could come from this situation and treated him as a threat to my safety, immediately.

Bridget feels more than safe out in the wild in her trailer with her SAINT rifle.
Bridget feels more than safe out in the wild in her trailer with her SAINT rifle.

I stood by the door with my gun and yelled to the stranger “What do you want?” My yell was firm and serious. From my concealed carry, self-protection, and self-defense classes I’ve learned to treat these situations with a strong tone and simple questions. After my question, this strange man replied, “I’m just seeing what you’re doing.”

Taking Action

My initial thought to this situation as soon as the man drove up is that I need to get him to leave immediately. From the way the man looked and walked to my trailer I could tell he was impaired and on some sort of serious substance. I yelled back at him, “You need to leave right now!” He replied, “Are you all alone in there? What is a young girl doing out here all by herself?” As if there weren’t enough red flags already, this was a big one, and my caution and fear turned to anger.

Bridget felt the SAINT Edge made for a great platform for her “trailer-defense” gun.
Bridget felt the SAINT Edge made for a great platform for her “trailer-defense” gun.

I yelled “Leave NOW! I’m not asking you again, this is your last chance!” Thankfully we both had the locked door between us, and my curtains were closed so he could not see in, but I could see out.

“Okay, okay…jeez!” this man replied as he walked back to his truck and proceeded to leave. I watched him drive back the way he came and sure enough he was gone, and never bothered me again.

Bridget takes her self-reliance seriously, and really enjoys the freedom her camper gives her.
Bridget takes her self-reliance seriously, and really enjoys the freedom her camper gives her.

Being Prepared

Thankfully nothing bad happened and the confrontation was very short, but the point is that this could happen to anyone at any time. I think we can all agree that no strange, impaired man should ever approach a woman (or man) in the wilderness during the night. This man clearly was not thinking right and had bad intentions, and I read the situation immediately and knew how to treat it.

If that same situation happened and I only had a knife on me, or nothing at all, I would have been far more scared. Feeling confident in protecting yourself is priceless.

This encounter was a good reminder that there are simply weird, crazy people out there. It is important to be well-trained, and have a gun close and ready God forbid that moment ever comes.

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Pneumatic mortars by Tom Gaylord (B.B. Pelletier)

pneumatic mortar
Pneumatic mortar—or this one is probably a howitzer.

This report covers:

  • Pneumatic mortar
  • Ideal for trench warfare
  • Howitzer?
  • My experience with pneumatic mortars
  • Germany
  • Big or small—fear them all
  • Last word

When Val Gamerman asked me if I would like to write about the Brandt pneumatic mortar of the first World War I jumped at the chance because I had been a 4.2-inch / 107 mm mortar platoon leader in a tank battalion in Germany. More on that in a bit.

Pneumatic mortar

Val somehow acquired a short and soundless video of a pneumatic field gun being primed and fired. If you watch at the end of the 17-second film clip you will see a puff of compressed air being expelled from the mouth of the gun tube. The link below opens a short video that says it is a Brandt mortar but it’s actually a pneumatic breech-loaded howitzer. Click on the link and let’s watch.

https://www.reddit.com/r/airguns/s/zXA0kTGYrz

The video shows four guys pumping with hand pumps but the way guns like the Brandt mortar usually worked was from a high-pressure air tank. That mortar will launch a 60mm / 2.4-inch mortar shell out to about 400 meters. It is similar to and a little more powerful than our M79 or M203 40mm grenade launcher.

pneumatic mortar shell
pneumatic mortar shell.

Ideal for trench warfare

Such a device is ideal for trench warfare as the combat lines are often just a few hundred yards / meters apart, with the soldiers on both sides in deep trenches. A mortar is an indirect-fire weapon that lobs a shell high but not that far. The four-hundred-meter range of the pneumatic mortar is more than enough range in most instances and the high angle of fire drops the shell down into the trenches.

Being pneumatic, this weapon is quieter than a firearm. It also has no real muzzle flash to draw enemy attention.

Howitzer?

Many references call these weapons howitzer, which are also indirect fire weapons but they don’t shoot shells as high-angled. Howitzers are also called cannons by civilians. They shoot farther than mortars but not as high-angled,

Some of the photos of pneumatic guns like these I’ve seen online do look like howitzers as well as mortars. The first photo with this report is one of those. Howitzers load from the breech and mortars load from the muzzle.

Pneumatic mortars ranged in size up to 12 cm / 4.7 inches. A 20 cm / 7.87-inch gun was planned and even tested but I believe never fielded. And once the war ended all weapons development ended.

My experience with pneumatic mortars

My first Army assignment was to the Third Armored Cavalry Regiment at Fort Lewis, Washington. I had one 4.2-inch mortar in my armored cavalry platoon. The 4.2-inch mortar launches a 24.5 lb. / 11.11kg. high-explosive shell out to over 4,500 yards / 4115 meters. They also shoot high-powered flares, white phosphorous incendiary rounds, chemical rounds like tear gas and nerve agent and others.

When I was with the cavalry in 1970 the Vietnam war was in full swing and US-based units like mine had no money for ammunition, so we usually could not fire our weapons. Hence we needed to find creative ways to train. One of my sergeants located a pneumatic sub-caliber mortar training device and we used it to train.

That unit was a simple smoothbore tube that ran down inside the main mortar gun tube with a high-pressure hose alongside it. When the small practice shell dropped down that tube and tripped open the air valve at the bottom a high-pressure burst of air was released. That lobbed a blue plastic training shell out between 50 and 100 feet. A .22 blank cartridge in the nose of the shell fired when it hit the ground. We built targets out of tin cans and cardboard boxes. It was as close as I ever came to playing with toys in the Army!

Germany

Later in my career I went to Germany where I was the 4.2-inch mortar platoon leader of the Second Battalion, Eighty-First Armor in the First Armor Division “Old Ironsides”. I was assigned to the platoon the day I reported into my unit in Erlangen.

1AD

The platoon I took over had failed its ARTEP (Army Training and Evaluation Program) the year before. That is an annual proficiency test that each unit takes. It was a black eye for the battalion and the battalion commander told me it had better not happen again! I trained with that platoon for four months and when we took our next ARTEP we scored second-highest of mortar platoons in the division.


One of my four mortar tracks with part of the crew. We could “hipshoot” rapidly with the gun mounted inside the tracked vehicle as seen here but for the greatest precision we mounted the tube on the ground on a huge baseplate that you see on the left of the tracked vehicle. Once several shots had been fired the recoil of the mortar shell dug that baseplate into the ground, settling the gun in. From then on it was quite accurate.

Two years later when I commanded the company this platoon was a part of, the division commander watched them blow the turret off a target tank several miles away and over a hill! He awarded every platoon member an Impact Army Commendation Medal. It was sheer luck that the mortar shell dropped down into that tank turret and the general knew it but sometimes you award good luck!

Big or small—fear them all

The one thing I learned from my experience with mortars is you don’t want them shooting at you! My 4.2-inchers could jeopardize armored vehicles and fortified positions, but even the little 60 mm mortars the infantry carried were nothing to mess with!

Last word

My final word to all of you today is to remember that today is June third, the day Billy Joe McAllister jumped off the Tallahatchie bridge (song, Ode to Billy Joe).

author avatar
Tom Gaylord (B.B. Pelletier)
Tom Gaylord, also known as B.B. Pelletier, provides expert insights to airgunners all over the world on Pyramyd AIR. He has earned the title The Godfather of Airguns™ for his contributions to the industry, spending many years with AirForce Airguns and starting magazines dedicated to the sport such as Airgun Illustrated.

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